Tag Archives: Panaretos Kyriatzidis

MR PUNCH AT THE OPERA

★★★

Arcola Theatre

MR PUNCH AT THE OPERA at the Arcola Theatre

★★★

“At last! Hubert sings, with Matthew Kellett’s beautiful baritone and nice comedic performance”

I took two young reviewers with me to see Mr Punch at The Opera, Mila (9) and Willow (5) as the show is supposedly an introduction to the world of opera for children. The production is part of the Arcola Theatre’s annual Grimeborn Opera Festival – a playful nod to Glyndebourne.

What could be better than a new take on Pergolesi’s Renaissance opera La Serva Padrona, but using the setting and characters from Punch and Judy? Punch and Judy, with its origins in Italian commedia dell’arte, the grotesque, the laughter, the characters, the traditional short scenes, slapstick, humour, mayhem, intentional violence, domestic abuse, shocked laughter a plenty – and everyone dies. Perfect for an opera – but sadly Mr Punch at The Opera is not.

Mr Punch at The Opera tells the tale of old Hubert whose maid Serena teaches him some tough lessons and manipulates him into marriage; whilst back centre stage, there is a traditional Punch and Judy theatre that reveals its glove puppet characters, who slightly interact with the duo’s storyline. If only director Becca Marriott had directed Mr Punch at The Opera to run at breakneck farcical speed it would have had some identity to a Punch and Judy show, but sadly it was not.

Mr Punch at The Opera starts with the Puppetry Director (Professor James), dragging a heavy wicker basket onto the stage space. He opens it, and we see the character of Hubert inside – who must have been crouched up in there for some 15 minutes waiting for the audience to enter! Slowly Hubert (Matthew Kellett) unfolds with realistic puppet moves and bows to the audience. Great start – and my imagination was spinning with excitement as could opera meet puppetry….?

Enter Serena (Grace Nyandoro) the maid, then talks to the audience pantomime style about being a feisty strong modern woman, no singing. Serena continually goads her boss, Hubert.

At last! Hubert sings, with Matthew Kellett’s beautiful baritone and nice comedic performance. It was a shame that Kellett plays the Hubert character as an old man when speaking and moving, especially when he finally breaks into song his voice sounds so vibrant and young. It would have worked better in this new production if Hubert had been a spoilt young man. As Hubert sings about hot chocolate, we have our first sighting of a puppet in the upstage puppet theatre – the crocodile who steals and guzzles down Hubert’s hot chocolate then his string of sausages. Serena does not believe Hubert’s cries of crocodile – even though the few children (and mostly adult audience) shouted to her “it’s behind you”!

Serena ties Hubert up with a washing line and steals Mr Punch’s large slapstick and threatens to use it on Hubert, as the slapstick makes its slapping noises. One presumes, with the same glee that we would usually associate with Mr Punch, as he abuses his various victims. Is this what Mr Punch at The Opera is about, turning the domestic abuse usually seen in Punch and Judy on its head, making the female the abuser? Serena demands that Hubert marry her, or she will have to marry the Policeman, another puppet character. Hubert refuses so she cries and uses hypnosis, and he falls in love, and they share a kiss.

There was not much audience participation and no gleeful shouting audience – although the adults were given party blowers which they were told to use by Serena, when something they didn’t agree with was happening – but it was all a bit confusing as clearly Serena was making them blow at the bad things she was doing, and I wanted to use it when I felt sorry for poor abused Herbert – so I’m not sure when they were supposed to be used.

Professor James is clearly a professional Punch and Judy theatre performer and was very adept at all the characters he played, including the most famous of lines “that’s the way to do it”, which we just about heard. He was much more comfortable hiding in plain sight in his little puppet theatre than when forced to leave his safe space and perform out front in full view. Grace Nyandoro plays Serena as a rather hardened, manipulative, abusive young woman with her crocodile tears, just after poor Hubert’s money. She has a pretty soprano – when she doesn’t try to sing in chest through certain lines, which was not pretty at all. The musical director at the piano was Panaretos Kyriatzidis alongside cellist Alison Holford, both accomplished musicians. Mr Punch at The Opera was created by The Opera Makers company.

Mila and Willow enjoyed Mr Punch at The Opera, but neither had any clue what was going on or what it was about. Neither had they ever heard of Punch and Judy, until we explained what to expect before leaving to go on our opera adventure. Willow didn’t have a favourite moment, but for Mila it was the singing, and she said she would like to give Mr Punch at The Opera three stars. Mr Punch was very lucky that I was sharing my review with Mila – but as an opera for children I was very pleased I was sharing my experience with these first time opera goers. Brava Mila and Willow.

 

MR PUNCH AT THE OPERA at the Arcola Theatre

Reviewed on 21st August 2024

by Debbie Rich

Photography by Becca Marriott

 

 

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

FABULOUS CREATURES | ★★★ | May 2024
THE BOOK OF GRACE | ★★★★★ | May 2024
LIFE WITH OSCAR | ★★★ | April 2024
WHEN YOU PASS OVER MY TOMB | ★★★★★ | February 2024
SPUTNIK SWEETHEART | ★★★ | October 2023
GENTLEMEN | ★★★★ | October 2023
THE BRIEF LIFE & MYSTERIOUS DEATH OF BORIS III, KING OF BULGARIA | ★★★★★ | September 2023
THE WETSUITMAN | ★★★ | August 2023
UNION | ★★★ | July 2023
DUCK | ★★★★ | June 2023

Mr Punch at the Opera

Mr Punch at the Opera

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La Traviata – 4 Stars

Traviata

La Traviata

King’s Head Theatre

Reviewed – 3rd October 2018

★★★★

“artistic lighting creates a snug, clandestine ambience, with resourceful and imaginative scene changes”

 

Far from 1850s Paris, we enter through the sleazy glow and pulsating bass of the King’s Head Theatre into present day England for a new take on Verdi’s ‘La Traviata’. Stripping the story to its core and adapting four main roles to fit the update, Becca Marriott and Helena Jackson recreate the life of Violetta as a pole-dancer who chances upon Elijah (Alfredo in the original), reluctantly dragged by his father into the club where she works, and finds true love. Although a chunk of Alfredo’s story of male friendship and rivalry has been omitted, this adaptation adheres to the original idea of social reputation by making Elijah’s father anxious for his own political career (rather than unable to marry off his daughter) and he manages to persuade Violetta to leave his son. The ending moves away from the melodramatic tableau of the heroine dying in her lover’s arms, to an angry re-encounter of the couple and, while clinging on to his image, her decision to find her own freedom.

The combination of Amanda Mascarenhas’s red-tinged set and Nic Farman’s artistic lighting creates a snug, clandestine ambience, with resourceful and imaginative scene changes. In contrast to the grandiose, full-scale productions, this one concentrates on the intense relationships between four of the opera’s characters, Panaretos Kyriatzidis’ arrangement of the orchestral score for solo piano working well as an accompaniment. Oliver Brignall’s expressive tenor tones capture the changing moods of Elijah – nervous, enamoured, angry, impassioned. However, the strident power of Becca Marriott’s singing dominates the occasional duets they have. Talented as both librettist and soprano, she interprets Violetta with anguish and desire but could shape the music with more variety of dynamics and articulation. The intricacy of the coloratura in ‘Sempre libera’ is lost and we miss the spiritual quality of her final scene. Michael Georgiou as Sinclair, Elijah’s father, is the only one to compete with Marriott in volume with his strong yet lyrical voice. He adds a light-hearted mood at the beginning and, later, unnerving persuasion with Violetta and Elijah. Flora (Gemma Morsley) commands the stage as she oversees her nightclub but, despite showing her true vocal potential in a couple of instances, she is barely audible in the group passages.

Verdi’s ensemble writing is such an important part of his operas. The threads of the plot weave together and the parts need to be balanced to be able to appreciate the narrative and the music. A readjustment in certain sections would give everyone a chance to be heard. This ‘Traviata’ may not have the uplifting contrast of the big choruses or the intrigue of the sub plots, but its contemporary slant and abundance of wonderful arias make it an enjoyable taster for those unfamiliar with opera.

 

Reviewed by Joanna Hetherington

Photography by Bill Knight

 

kings head theatre

La Traviata

King’s Head Theatre until 27th October

 

Previously reviewed at this venue;
East | ★★★★ | January 2018
Catherine and Anita | ★★★★ | February 2018
Mine | ★★★★ | March 2018
The Mikado | ★★★★★ | March 2018
Fishbowl | ★★★ | April 2018
Tumble Tuck | ★★★★ | April 2018
Baby Box | ★★★★ | May 2018
F*cking Men | ★★★ | May 2018
The Unbuilt City | ★★★ | June 2018
For Reasons That Remain Unclear | ★★ | July 2018
Glitterball | ★★★★★ | July 2018
Riot Act | ★★★★★ | July 2018
The Cluedo Club Killings | ★★★ | July 2018
And Tell Sad Stories of the Deaths of Queens | ★★★★ | August 2018
Hamilton (Lewis) | ★★★ | September 2018

 

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